The invention relates to a parquet board with a groove and tongue edge profile comprising a projecting tongue on at least one edge of each parquet board and a receding groove on at least one opposite edge of the parquet board.
Parquet boards of this type are disclosed in e.g. German utility models 74 00 405 and 74 36 978. These types of parquet boards are joined together with the help of the usual groove and tongue connections plus adhesive. The use of an adhesive makes the process of laying the parquet considerably more difficult. Applying the adhesive to the groove and/or tongue is time-consuming, and there is a constant risk that the adhesive will escape at the surface, or accidentally get onto the parquet surface as it is being applied, so that it then has to be removed in a separate step.
It is for these reasons that solutions based on a modified groove and tongue connection have recently been developed for use with an alternative to parquet floors that has become increasingly popular over the last few years—so-called laminate panels. In these solutions the simple groove and tongue connections are supplemented by locking elements which, after the panels have been assembled, create a lock which holds the panels together inseparably once they have been laid, at least in the laid, horizontal position.
These solutions cannot yet, however, be transferred to parquet elements as the laminate panels are considerably thinner than parquet boards and, on the one hand, are sufficiently elastic to permit the necessary deformation allowing the panels to be snapped together. On the other hand, parquet boards are made from a relatively heavy, multi-layered construction which makes complicated edge profile designs virtually impossible.
The task of this invention is therefore to create a parquet board of the above type so that it will allow a glue-free, form-fitting edge lock with a relatively simple modified groove and tongue connection.
According to the invention, this task is solved in that the top edge of the tongue is provided with a projecting locking lip running in the longitudinal direction of the tongue, and in that a corresponding locking recess running in the longitudinal direction of the groove is contrived in the bottom edge of the groove-boundary-forming top groove cheek.
The dimensions of the locking lip and the locking recess are measured so that adjacent parquet boards can be pushed or hit into each other.
The entry edge of the groove-boundary forming top groove cheek is preferably provided with a tapered or rounded surface to facilitate the passage of the locking lip into the groove. Although this operation also requires a certain elastic deformation of the edge profiles of adjacent parquet boards, said material deformation is largely sufficient to lock adjacent boards together, especially where an appropriate construction is used in conjunction with appropriate force, e.g. hammer blows, as may be applied to parquet, given that it is much thicker.
To facilitate the joining together of adjacent boards, the bottom groove cheek is provided with a gradation towards its free end which enlarges the groove via a tapered surface. The tongue is contrived to match, having a portion of greater thickness in the root zone which runs into the outer portion of the tongue via a similar tapered surface. At least a small gap is preserved between these two tapered surfaces in the assembled position so that the finished end position is not determined by the joining-up of these two tapered surfaces, but solely by the joining-up of the top front ends of adjacent boards above the groove and tongue, thereby ensuring a jointless finish when the boards are laid.
Preferred embodiments of this invention will be described in more detail below with reference to the enclosed drawings, in which:
The edges of two adjacent boards 10,12, are shown in
As shown in the drawing, the boards are assembled with a gap between the front end of tongue 14 and the back end of groove 16, as will be explained below.
The front ends of both boards in the zone above the groove and tongue are designated as 18 and 20. The front end 18 of the left board projects upwards at an angle towards the right board 12, which guarantees that both boards join up in position 22 at the top surface of both boards, thereby ensuring a jointless finish. This is also the reason for the above-mentioned gap between the front end of tongue 14 and the back end of groove 16.
The top edge of tongue 14 is provided with an upwardly projecting locking lip 24 running in the longitudinal direction of the tongue. In the assembled position, this locking lip 24 engages in a corresponding locking recess 26 running in the longitudinal direction of the groove in the bottom edge of top groove cheek 28.
To facilitate the passage of tongue 14 with the projecting locking lip 24 into groove 16, the top groove cheek 28 is provided with a tapered surface 30 at the entry edge of groove 16. This surface may also be rounded instead of tapered. The edge closest to the free end of tongue 14 is provided with a tapered surface 32. The edge of the locking recess is also provided with a tapered surface (not designated) on the corresponding side. It can be seen that in the assembled position, there is at least a small gap between these two tapered surfaces so that here, too, these surfaces do not determine the assembled, pushed together end position, thereby allowing the boards to be laid jointlessly in position 22.
The free end of the bottom groove cheek, which is designated as 34, is provided with a gradation 36 which enlarges the width of groove 16 via a tapered surface 38.
Tongue 14 is correspondingly provided in its root portion, i.e. where it joins with left board 10, with a portion 40 of greater thickness which runs into the non-designated front, or outer, portion of tongue 14 via a tapered surface 42. The two tapered surfaces 38 and 42 are essentially contrived with the same angle of inclination of e.g. 45° in relation to the plane of the board. A slight gap is also preserved between these tapered surfaces when the two boards come into contact with each other in the top assembled position 22.
The drawing also shows that the bottom groove cheek 34 is shorter than top groove cheek 28, so that in the assembled position, the front end of bottom groove cheek 34 remains at a recognizable distance from the corresponding bottom front end of the first board 10.
The front end of bottom groove cheek 34 is also provided with a relatively steep, upwardly inclined tapered surface 44, which is angled upwards at e.g. 60°.
The elasticity of the type of parquet boards in question here is relatively low. This is why gradation 36 is provided inside groove 16.
By way of further explanation,
A similar effect could be achieved by shortening the bottom groove cheek 34. As a consequence of this, however, tongue 14 would not be sufficiently supported inside groove 16. If the boards were laid on a slightly uneven surface, left board 10 might then end up being pushed downwards in relation to the right board, 12 of
Throughout the above description it has been assumed that the locking lip is provided on the top edge of the tongue, and that the gradation in the groove cheek is contrived in the bottom groove cheek. This orientation certainly represents one preferred embodiment based on the assumption that the top groove cheek is generally thicker than the bottom groove cheek and is made from solid wood, so that the fact that the locking recess is contrived in it does not engender any significant weakening. Basically, however, it is possible and reasonable to reverse the embodiment in every respect.
The top portion of parquet boards of the above type is generally made from solid wood, i.e. in the form of solid wood blocks, whilst the bottom portion consists of a substrate of glued softwood or plywood. Medium-thickness fiberboard substrates are regarded as less suitable. The softwood or plywood substrates used in practice have a natural inherent elasticity. This is important for e.g. the bottom groove cheek 34 in this invention, whose elasticity also facilitates the assembly process.
Parquet boards of the type described here are generally manufactured in the shape of relatively long, slim rectangles. The edge profiling described above is conceived for the opposite longitudinal sides in particular.
Profiling of this type can also be used at the front ends, although it will not need to be of the same height as the holding power required here is less.
We return finally to
As can be seen by
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